Introducing Friday Night Noods

Happy to announce a new podcast coming to the network named Friday Night Noods. The show is hosted by Kim Baldwin and Louisa Glenn; two Nashville residents that make a point of living a “Bentley lifestyle on a Mazda budget.” The show is not about how to live beyond your means but it will cover local area events and various pursuits of happiness. Here’s a teaser:

The first episode will air Friday, Oct 19th, on all the various streaming services and you can judge for yourself just exactly what these two are up to. In their own words: “Listen, or don’t!”

Consensual Kink at Scale

An extremely donkin’ theme from Jay Leo Phillips kicks off an episode wherein Ashley and Jamie shower adoration on Genesis, Jenny Slate, Serena Williams, Kristi Yamaguchi and a whole host of additional Sports Hotties like Dennis Rodman, Odell Beckham, Russell Westbrook, Scottie Pippen (the shy best friend) and the entire Afghanistan Cricket Team.

Plenty of listener submissions are discussed, as well as a return to the Original Bag of Hotties; which yields contemplation on Josh Gadd, Principal Skinner and Cillian Murphy (among others).

To view the full episode notes, visit the Hott Minute site.
Theme song by Jay Leo Phillips
Latest Album, One Million, One Million, One Million, now available.

Spotify | Bandcamp

Artwork by Elizabeth Williams
BG Music by Upright T-Rex Music

Noods Teaser

Join Kim & Louisa as they chow down on nood(le)s and dish about various pursuits of happiness, things we don’t hate, and living that Bentley lifestyle on a Mazda budget.

Our first episode is available October 19. Listen, or don’t.

New Man – Sings

From a journalistic integrity point of view, I should not be reviewing the debut New Man album, Sings. The record was released on yk Records and that’s my label. So, the amount of bias involved here is overwhelming. You could call this payola but no one’s getting paid at WOTT, so it’s more like nepotism.

With that in mind, I can subjectively tell you that this is eight songs of smart, witty, pop songs. The term “pop” (and it’s sub-genre Power Pop) often have a, much deserved, reputation for being overly simplistic, shallow expressions of a formula. Sings is not that. The songs are catchy, upbeat and memorable – as a pop song should be – but the layers of dense instrumentation, rich vocal harmonies and surprising flourishes make it surpass any detrimental feelings about the genre.

Listening to the title track “EP” and first single “Maybe I’m Feelin’ Fine”, it should be clear that New Man has a Beach Boys influence. Specifically, there’s a “everything including the kitchen sink” approach to many of these songs that somehow manages to keep itself from becoming a total aural circus.

All bias aside, you can judge it for yourself by giving it a stream or swinging by The 5 Spot tonight (Oct 12th) to see them perform it live.

Creamer – Creamer

They say don’t judge a book by it’s cover but, for better or worse, sometimes first appearances aren’t entirely inaccurate. My first introduction to Creamer was a segment of the variety show Network77 in which a stereotyped German MC introduced the band amongst a swirl of psychedelic colors and bygone era green screen effects. That video, for the track “Drugs No More”, now serves as the songs official video. Frontman Philip Creamer’s appearance, complete with long hair topped with fringe, outlandish jacket and multiple rings stood out as a real look. However, whatever superficial judgments were cast his way were immediately thrown out the window due to the overwhelmingly impressive vocal performance.

The debut, self-titled, full-length Creamer is clearly influenced by 60’s and 70’s era bands, with Queen being the clear front runner for “No Shit” comparisons but that should only be the start of the conversation. The album may be influenced by that familiar sound but it manages to delicately skirt the line of being a superficial aping. Creamers vocals vary between intimately delicate, optimistically soaring and painfully forelorn, augmented by layers of tasteful choral backing vocals and musical details that require multiple listens to be fully appreciated.

It would be disingenuous to omit the references – both visually and aurally – to Classic Rock era bands but the comparison also undermines the enjoyment of the record. This is an expertly crafted, warmly familiar and often catchy-as-fuck collection of songs that should be put into regular rotation. If someone asks what year it was released, that’s just confirmation that the songs are timeless.

7: Playing Q-Bert, Listening to Abracadabra

Mickey and Matt wade into the dangerous territory of preferred pizza types with a visit to Slim & Husky’s but not before discussing some recommendations at The Post and TN Brew Works. They also take a quick trip down memory lane to remind you that Margot Cafe may not be new on the scene but they’re doing great work.

If you have suggestions for spots to check out, please reach out to @thisisthaplace on Twitter or Instagram.

Intro Music by Uncle Skeleton, Outro Music by Jay Leo Phillips.

Kim Logan – “Couleur Café”

Last we heard from Kim Logan was with her Psuedoscience: Chapter 3 single collaboration with Gyasi Heus, a swampy rockin’ affair if ever there was one. So, it’s rather surprising and refreshing to hear her newest offering is a Serge Gainsbourg cover of “Couleur Cafe.”

The release comes complete with a fully orchestrated video directed by Liam Jordan that features some sweet choreographed cafe dance moves and some subtle stop motion with Logan herself.

It’s a faithful cover of the original but not without it’s own spin; particularly the presence of Logan’s vocals and a more upbeat pace compared to Gainsbourg’s languid style.

Bandsplainer Squeeze Playlist

The latest Bandsplainer episode covers the history and works of the highly underrated band Squeeze. Host Olivia Ladd and guest Charlie Zaillian discuss each release, the trials and tribulations of the band and the influences they had on musicians that came after them.

After learning all that, you may want an actual musical primer on what Squeeze sounds like – particularly given that their career spans decades. Fortunately, Charlie Zaillian delivers in spades on that front with this convenient Spotify playlist.

Many thanks to Charlie for putting together this stellar playlist and for letting us share it. Let yourself be both informed and entertained with a deep dive into this 2 hour offering.

Z – “Burner”

Zach Prosser, mastermind behind Z and occasional Bandsplainer guest, recently announced that the band would be releasing an EP and a full-length in October. The EP, entitled MAGNUfEEK, is a Cassette Store Day exclusive that I imagine you’ll have to beg and plead with Banana Tapes to get a copy. The full-length, entitled BarbedWire.org, is currently unreleased but we may have a bit of a sneak peek of what lies within from a recent Bandcamp posting of the song “Burner.”

Doing some low level Internet sleuthing, it seems that MAGNUfEEK does not contain a song with such a title, so it’s safe to assume this exists outside of that. The song itself is a much heavier number than the previously released “456“, verging into metal territory with the vocal growls, sludgy guitars and plenty of distortion. Does this signal that the track is its own standalone endeavor or that BarbedWire.org promised to be an eclectic offering of whatever-the-fuck style the band wants to put out into the world?

Sure, in this age of social media I could just ask the band but I prefer the speculation route. My money’s placed firmly on the idea that the forthcoming album is a varietal offering. Only time will tell and prove me wrong or right but, in the meantime, I’ll enjoy the surprising offering of “Burner.”

Volume 118

After two weeks of heavy travel and an overwhelming feeling of being out of the loop, we’re back! Unsurprisingly, putting together this episodes playlist of tracks was a total breeze. How is that possible? Well, Nashville just keeps cranking out the great music so finding eight songs of entertainment is unbelievably easy. Pats on the back to everyone involved.

Peachy – ‘Rich Boy’

Idle Bloom – ‘Rewired’

Adia Victoria – ‘Dope Queen Blues’

Jasmin Kaset & Quichenight – ‘A Single Right Word’

Dialup Ghost – ‘Hell’

All Them Witches – ‘1st vs 2nd’

Telefones – ‘Castlefactory’

Sean Thompson’s Weird Ears – ‘Down On Your Luck’

“Main Theme” by Upright T-Rex Music
Cover image: Peachy!

Peachy – Squirt

If you missed the premiere over on The Cream, please go take a moment to familiarize yourself with the background of Peachy – the new trio of Leah Miller, Rachel Warrick and Benji Coale – and their new album Squirt that’s been released by Idle Bloom’s own Olivia Scibelli’s new label, Budding Romance Records.

The album itself manages to find that tricky balance between head-bopping pop songs and snarling punkish delivery. The longest runtime clocks in just over three minutes, which means that none of the tracks have a moment to drag or give a moment of reprieve from the energy they’re putting out. “Rich Boy” is the prime example of that unrelenting push forward. Lyrically and musically, it’s emblematic of the album as it could be a Fuck You ode to Trump or just your run of the mill asshole (maybe both), complete with all the appropriate and empowered mentality that comes with it.

Naming your band “Peachy” and giving your debut album a bright pink and rainbow adorned cover would imply an album of keyboard fueled twee pop songs but Peachy is an exercise in subverting your expectations. These songs have bite and an opinion, namely in their rightful expression of frustration and disgust with much of our current social climate.

Episode 3, Formerly 1

Jason and Kelly look at all things Station, consider the hidden tragedies of a white-washed of heaven, discuss the power dynamics in Missy’s various relationships, and review Faith No More’s “The Perfect Crime.” STATION!